
Following Trevista – The Challenges That Lie Ahead
Trevista ECE-8th grade in northwest Denver has struggled for years. It has tried to remake itself, even making some gains.

Following Trevista – Choosing A New Principal
Colorado Public Radio is airing a year-long series on a school called Trevista in Northwest Denver.

Following Trevista — Who Stays And Who Goes
This year Colorado Public Radio is following a school in Northwest Denver that is undergoing big changes.

State Launches DPS Cheating Probe
State officials have launched an investigation into possible cheating on standardized tests at two Denver elementary schools.

On the Education Beat — May 2012
From time to time, Colorado Matters will check in with our reporters about the big ideas brewing on their beats.

Obama Rallies CU Students On Loan Costs
President Barack Obama rallied thousands of students at CU Boulder last night.

Obama to Focus on Student Loans at CU-Boulder
Colorado ranks third in the nation for the number of students defaulting on student loans.

Final Piece of Teacher Evaluation Law Falls Into Place
State school board members have signed off on the last piece of Colorado’s controversial law that requires teachers to undergo yearly evaluations.

Can Schools Have Reform AND Money?
When it comes to how to improve public schools, people tend to fall into one of two camps. One says schools don’t have enough money to do the job well.

Great Expectations, Mixed Results for New DPS Schools
Denver school officials launched an ambitious experiment five years ago. They went into neighborhoods with chronically low-performing schools and created new ones, and in some cases, they overhauled bad ones.

Literacy Bill Advances After Passionate Debate
A bill that makes it easier for schools to hold back struggling third graders passed its first floor vote in the Colorado House Tuesday.

Teacher Contract Talks May Go Public
Contract talks between public school districts and unions would be open to the public, under a bill that passed its final committee in the state House Thursday.

Former Foes Meet to Tackle Teacher Evaluation Law
More than 500 Colorado teachers, principals and administrators came together Monday to start figuring out how to comply with the state’s new teacher effectiveness law.

What happens when Johnny still can’t read in third grade?
Next Monday state lawmakers consider the question of whether third graders should be held back if they fail their reading tests.

From Combat to Classroom
Thousands of veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are taking advantage of the Post-9/11 GI Bill.

Citizens weigh in on JeffCo schools budget cuts
Parents and teachers in the state’s largest school district are coming to grips with a harsh reality: up to $60 million needs to be slashed from school budgets over the […]